Executive Summary
National Audit Office Value for Money Report
In 2002 our report
Tackling pensioner poverty: Encouraging
take-up of entitlements examined efforts by the Department for
Work and Pensions to increase pensioners’ take-up of benefits.
Since this report, the Government has made important changes to the
benefits to pensioners and their delivery through The Pension
Service, created in 2002 as an executive agency of the Department
for Work and Pensions (the Department). These changes include
introducing Pension Credit to replace the Minimum Income Guarantee
as the main income-related benefit for those of pension age, and
supplementing the State Pension which is the most important
pensioner entitlement in financial terms and has very high take-up.
Following our report, the Committee of Public Accounts made a
number of recommendations.
[
Footnote 1]
This report assesses the progress the Department has made against
those recommendations, and what challenges remain. Our accompanying
Technical Report documents our methodology and findings in greater
detail.
[
Footnote 2] Our overall conclusion is
that since our 2002 report The Pension Service has made real and
substantial progress in helping pensioners to secure their
entitlements using new and well thought through approaches, but at
the same time there remains more to be done.

Has the Department implemented the Public Accounts Committee’s
recommendations?
- On setting targets? Yes - for take-up of
Pension Credit but not at a local level and not for other benefits
(see Part 2 of this report)
- On communicating effectively with pensioners?
Yes - but more still needs to be done for
harder-to-influence pensioners (Part 3)
- On working in partnership? Yes - but there is
limited evidence of cost-effectiveness (Part
4)
- On simplification and reducing duplication?
Yes - but more needs to be done (Part
5)
What has been achieved?
- 2.7 million pensioner households now receive Pension Credit,
one million more than received its predecessor the Minimum Income
Guarantee. This is about 61 to 69 per cent of the eligible
population (3.7 million to 4.2 million pensioner
households).[Footnote 3]
- The Pension Service has met its target to pay the Guarantee
element of Pension Credit – which helps the poorest pensioners – to
2.1 million households (about 70 to 81 per cent of those
eligible).
- The Pension Service created a new board-level post to drive
increased take-up of entitlements and is taking a joined-up
approach looking at a range of benefits and services for
pensioners.
- The Pension Service Local Service delivers a high-quality
face-to-face service for pensioners who need it.
- Progress has been made on simplifying the processing of
benefits.
What challenges remain?
- The 2006 PSA target to pay Pension Credit to three million
households will not be met.
- There has been a fall in take-up of Housing Benefit and Council
Tax Benefit.
- Some groups of pensioners – such as those in less deprived
areas, rural areas, areas with large minority ethnic populations,
and areas with older pensioners – are less likely to claim (see
Figure 1 below).
But, the latest take-up figures are at least one year old and do
not reflect some of the recent good work by The Pension
Service.
Figure 1 ("Some areas have lower take-up of
Pension credit") is unavailable in this version of the
executive summary.
What works?
- The Pension Credit marketing strategy works well for most
customers.
- The Pension Service Local Service provides a high quality
customer service and targets harder-to-influence pensioners.
- The Local Service looks at all benefits for pensioners, not
just Pension Credit.
- The Pension Service is successfully working in partnership with
local government and voluntary sector organisations.
Has the Department got the right strategy?
Yes, particularly if…
- take-up continues to be encouraged across all pensioner
benefits.
- there is more local work to target disadvantaged groups which
are not always identified by scans of national data.
- there is better monitoring and measurement of activity
impact.
- more automatic administrative processes are introduced as soon
as practicable.
What more needs to be done?
- Targets set for The Pension Service by the Department should
reflect the need to promote work to tackle pensioner poverty more
widely than simply encouraging take-up of Pension Credit.
- The Department should improve further the data on who is not
claiming, especially on Housing Benefit, Council Tax Benefit, and
Attendance Allowance.
- Targeting of local work should be improved by bringing together
data sources and encouraging local autonomy.
- The Department should develop its monitoring of
cost-effectiveness to inform future strategy and the targeting of
local resources.
- A clear policy is needed on The Pension Service’s wider role as
a gateway to other services.
See below for detailed recommendations.
Value for money assessment
The Pension Service has made good progress in tackling pensioner
poverty since our last report, in particular:
Effectiveness
- The Pension Service Local Service delivers a high-quality
service to pensioners which generates £1.9 billion in additional
benefits for pensioners each year.
- The Pension Service has made good efforts to streamline and
simplify benefit applications.
- The Pension Service has made good progress in working with
partners.
Efficiency and Economy
- The Pension Credit advertising campaign was twice as
cost-effective in increasing benefit take-up as the campaign for
its predecessor the Minimum Income Guarantee: for every £1 spent on
advertising, £55 was paid out in additional benefits for
pensioners.
- Local Service activity is of necessity face-to-face and
therefore resource-intensive, generating £7 in extra benefit for
pensioners visited per pound spent. However, many of those helped
by the Local Service are from the most vulnerable groups and would
lose entitlements without its help.
- The Pension Service is making good use of data to target
activity.
Challenges remain, as some pensioners are still not claiming
benefits to which they are entitled, although in part this is
because some pensioners are making a conscious choice not to do so.
The latest data does not yet reflect the progress made by the
Department, but overall our assessment is:
The Pension Service has a good strategy in place to increase
take-up by pensioners and tackle pensioner poverty. This should
deliver increasing value for money in the future.
Recommendations
Although The Pension Service has succeeded in increasing Pension
Credit claimants to 2.7 million households, it will need to take a
different approach to reach people who have still not claimed their
entitlements. Progress has been made by local service activity, but
given that face-to-face activity is resource-intensive, achieving
full take-up this way would be very expensive. In the long term,
more joined-up processes using a common IT system could allow
claims to be generated automatically and help reduce non-take-up.
But until this is possible, The Pension Service’s strategy of
broadening its approach is right. We recommend that it should apply
the lessons from Pension Credit to other benefit entitlements. In
particular:
- Targets set for The Pension Service by the Department
should reflect the need to promote work to tackle pensioner poverty
more widely than simply encouraging take-up of Pension
Credit.
The Department has a Public Service Agreement target to pay
Pension Credit to three million households by February 2006, rising
to 3.2 million by 2008. The existence of a target has been
successful in concentrating The Pension Service’s efforts on
maximising take-up of this new benefit. But Pension Credit is only
one of a range of benefits and services for which low-income
pensioners may be eligible, and raising take-up across these will
have a greater impact on reducing poverty. Setting a series of
national targets for different services would be unwieldy and
potentially lead to misdirected effort. A more effective
performance measure would capture all relevant activity, including
measures to increase saving for retirement, in line with wider
government objectives. There is no widely agreed definition of
pensioner poverty, but the Department is commissioning research
into suitable measures. Development of a broader target would need
to draw on this research for appropriate definitions and
methodologies, and on the experience of delivery organisations to
ensure practicability and that indicators are measurable
(paragraphs 1.6, 2.3, 2.8).
- The Department should improve further the data on who
is not claiming, especially on Housing Benefit, Council Tax Benefit
and Attendance Allowance.
The Department has used data on benefits, occupational pensions
and private savings to identify pensioner households potentially
eligible for Pension Credit, and sent the details to Pension
Centres and the Local Service so that they can follow this up with
targeted calls and visits. The Pension Service has also used its
records to identify and contact Pension Credit recipients who ought
to be receiving Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit. It should
build on this by using the techniques successfully used for Pension
Credit to identify potential recipients of the other income-related
benefits, especially in view of the apparent fall in take-up of
these benefits. For disability-related benefits, the Department
needs to develop a better understanding of the factors relating to
successful claims and progress its feasibility work on the scope
for estimating take-up rates for Attendance Allowance (paragraphs
2.2, 2.14, 3.2, 3.7).
- Targeting of local work should be improved by bringing
together data sources and encouraging local
autonomy.
Our analysis of data to estimate local variations in take-up
indicates that there are areas of relatively lower take-up even of
Pension Credit, where The Pension Service efforts have been
concentrated, and these are likely to be replicated for other
benefits. These gaps may represent people unwilling to apply, newly
eligible pensioners unaware of entitlements, or people whom
nationally driven activity has not reached. Working out which
groups are affected and how to reach them can only be done with the
assistance of local knowledge. At the same time, our survey has
identified relatively little locally-directed work to target groups
who are not claiming entitlements, and Local Service managers have
little autonomy. The Pension Service should strengthen the role of
the Partnership Liaison Manager to allow greater flexibility in
Local Service activities, and all agencies responsible for
delivering pensioner services need to work together to become more
responsive to local needs. The Pension Service has reiterated its
commitment to rolling out partnerships with local authorities in
joint teams (paragraphs 2.9, 3.7, 3.13, 4.3).
- The Department should develop its monitoring of
cost-effectiveness to inform future strategy and the targeting of
local resources.
Our fieldwork and literature review (Technical Report,
Chapter 6) identified a lack of systematic
evaluation of take-up work, particularly its cost-effectiveness,
and limited understanding of the reasons for variations in take-up.
We could not carry out our own evaluation because sufficient data
on the costs of activities had not been collected locally.
Furthermore, we could not make comparisons between different
approaches because the Local Service offices take a standard
approach across the country, and because there was no data on the
baseline level of take-up (for instance, if an area did not make
big improvements, it could be because take-up there was already
high). More differentiated locally targeted activity, as
recommended above, must be supported by monitoring and evaluation,
to improve understanding of what works and to identify when to
curtail activities that are no longer productive (paragraphs 3.13,
4.4, 4.13).
- A clear policy is needed on The Pension Service’s wider
role as a gateway to other services.
The Pension Service aims to work with partners to provide a
gateway to a network of entitlements and services for older people,
available in future through a single point of contact. At present,
it is not clear to what extent staff should point customers towards
wider services, and Pension Centre staff do not always feel they
have the capacity to do so. The Department should clarify what role
it expects the elements of The Pension Service to play in providing
links with other services, and train staff accordingly (paragraphs
3.7, 5.2-3, 5.9-10).
- [back to footnote 1] House of Commons
Committee of Public Accounts (2003), Tackling Pensioner Poverty:
Encouraging take-up of entitlements, Twelfth report of Session
2002-03, HC 565. We quote conclusions from this report at the start
of Parts 2 to 5 of our report.
- [back to footnote 2] Progress in
tackling pensioner poverty – Technical Report HC 1178-II,
2006-07.
- [back to footnote 3] Take-up rates
refer to 2004-05, the latest year for which data is available.
Claimant numbers relate to February 2006 – early
estimate.